The eyes receive slightly different views of the world, and the differences between their images (binocular disparity) are used to see depth. Several authors have suggested how the brain could exploit this information for three-dimensional (3D) motion perception, but here we consider a simpler strategy. Visual direction is the angle between the direction of an object and the direction that an observer faces. Here we describe human behavioral experiments in which observers use visual direction, rather than binocular information, to estimate an object's 3D motion even though this causes them to make systematic errors. This suggests that recent models of binocular 3D motion perception may not reflect the strategies that human observers actuall...
Sensory systems are faced with an essentially infinite number of possible environmental events but h...
People make surprising but reliable perceptual errors. Here, we provide a unified explanation for sy...
How do we decide whether an object approaching us will hit us? Information in the optic array should...
When an object moves in three dimensions (3-D), a combination of binocular disparity and lateral mot...
When an object moves in three dimensions (3-D), a combination of binocular disparity and lateral mot...
When an object moves in three dimensions (3-D), a combination of binocular disparity and lateral mot...
When an object moves in three dimensions (3-D), a combination of binocular disparity and lateral mot...
In principle, information for 3-D motion perception is provided by the differences in position and m...
In principle, information for 3-D motion perception is provided by the differences in position and m...
AbstractHow do we decide whether an object approaching us will hit us? The optic array provides info...
When an object is tracked with the eyes, veridical perception of the motion of that object and other...
Although we have made major advances in understanding motion perception based on the processing of l...
How do we decide whether an object approaching us will hit us? Information in the optic array should...
How do we decide whether an object approaching us will hit us? Information in the optic array should...
People make surprising but reliable perceptual errors. Here, we provide a unified explanation for sy...
Sensory systems are faced with an essentially infinite number of possible environmental events but h...
People make surprising but reliable perceptual errors. Here, we provide a unified explanation for sy...
How do we decide whether an object approaching us will hit us? Information in the optic array should...
When an object moves in three dimensions (3-D), a combination of binocular disparity and lateral mot...
When an object moves in three dimensions (3-D), a combination of binocular disparity and lateral mot...
When an object moves in three dimensions (3-D), a combination of binocular disparity and lateral mot...
When an object moves in three dimensions (3-D), a combination of binocular disparity and lateral mot...
In principle, information for 3-D motion perception is provided by the differences in position and m...
In principle, information for 3-D motion perception is provided by the differences in position and m...
AbstractHow do we decide whether an object approaching us will hit us? The optic array provides info...
When an object is tracked with the eyes, veridical perception of the motion of that object and other...
Although we have made major advances in understanding motion perception based on the processing of l...
How do we decide whether an object approaching us will hit us? Information in the optic array should...
How do we decide whether an object approaching us will hit us? Information in the optic array should...
People make surprising but reliable perceptual errors. Here, we provide a unified explanation for sy...
Sensory systems are faced with an essentially infinite number of possible environmental events but h...
People make surprising but reliable perceptual errors. Here, we provide a unified explanation for sy...
How do we decide whether an object approaching us will hit us? Information in the optic array should...